• Home

Casino Beirut Night Club

 
Casino Beirut Night Club 3,9/5 5399 reviews
Sex for Sale in Beirut
Lebanon's 'super nightclubs' straddle the line between brothel and strip club.
BY SULOME ANDERSON FEBRUARY 7, 2012
BEIRUT — Jad sits on a couch in the lobby of a hotel in Maameltein, Lebanon. The air is thick with stale cigarette smoke, and the mirror-lined walls are smeared and cracked. A gold crucifix gleams on his chest. There's a large notebook on the chair beside him. Every so often, an attractive, young, Slavic-looking woman walks over, and he opens the notebook so she can sign her name.
'I have to make sure they sign out before leaving the hotel,' says Jad, whose name has been changed. 'Otherwise, Immigrations will make me pay a penalty.'
Jad owns a 'super nightclub,' one of approximately 130 in Lebanon, most of which are located in the town of Maameltein -- just 20 minutes away from the glitzy clubs and high-end boutiques of Beirut. Not quite strip clubs, not quite brothels, super nightclubs represent the seedy underside of Lebanon's famous night life. Owners import women, usually from Eastern Europe or Morocco, to work in their clubs under an 'artist' visa. It's understood, however, that 'artist' is really just a euphemism for 'prostitute.'
Lebanese law stipulates that these women can enter the country only after signing an employment contract, which has to be approved by the Directorate of General Security. Although the women come voluntarily, it's not clear how many of them understand what their job will actually entail. According to Jad, most know what they're getting into. Once in Lebanon, however, the women's passports are usually confiscated until their contract is over.
There is no precise data on the super nightclub industry's revenues, but Jad estimates that he makes a maximum profit of $30,000 a month. In a 2009 article, Executive magazine reported that super nightclubs haul in at least $23 million a year through legitimate channels. That might be only the tip of the iceberg, however, as the industry also generates under-the-table income through prostitution. Although prostitution is technically legal in Lebanon under a 1931 law, it's only permitted in licensed brothels -- and the Lebanese government stopped issuing the licenses in 1975. Therefore, any prostitution that occurs in super nightclubs is nominally illegal.
As a result, a complicated ritual takes place in these establishments in order to stay on the right side of the law. Customers pay about $80 for a bottle of champagne (the government collects a 10 percent sales tax on each bottle) and an hour with one of the women at the club that night. The women are always fully dressed, and while kissing is allowed, further sexual contact is strictly prohibited. However, a bottle also buys you a 'date' with the woman sometime during the next week. Although there are clubs that will allow customers to take a woman on the same night for an extra fee, Jad says, this is rare since the penalties for such offenses are severe.
'One mistake, and Immigrations can ruin your business,' he says. 'It's not worth it to break the rules, even if it makes you money, because if you get caught, it can cost you a lot more.'
At first, Jad is evasive when asked whether the 'dates' purchased by customers usually include sex.
'We don't sell girls,' he maintains. 'We're not bordellos. We sell time with the girls. I only make money from the transactions at the club. But I don't have GPS on every girl. If they want to do that, it's their business. Nobody's forcing them.'
As the conversation continues, though, Jad concedes that most of the time, it's expected that the 'date' will end in a room at one of Maameltein's many cheap hotels. He insists, however, that the women have the option of saying no, and he's adamant that the industry gets a bad rep.
'Everybody thinks that people who work at cabarets are the worst people in Maameltein,' he says. 'But we're really the cleanest people.… I'm not trying to say that we're saints, but we have rules.'
Although Lebanon is widely considered to be one of the more sexually permissive countries in the Middle East, large portions of the country remain culturally conservative. According to Jad, most of his customers are wealthy, middle-aged Lebanese men, usually Muslim, who are looking to bypass the restrictions of Lebanese society.
'Lebanese girls don't like to go out and have fun because they're afraid people will say they're whores,' he says. 'Lebanese men like Russian girls because they like to have fun. If a guy wants to kiss a Lebanese girl, she'll probably start talking marriage and then he'll have to deal with her family.'
When I ask whether it would be possible to speak with one of the women, Jad is initially reluctant, but he seems to relax as the interview continues. At one point, he is interrupted by his cell phone and, after a brief conversation in Russian, indicates that one of the women will be coming downstairs to answer a few questions, though he insists on being present. Shortly after, a tall woman with white-blond hair enters the lobby dressed in pajamas. She rubs her eyes sleepily and sits down next to him. Her name is Lina, and she's from Ukraine. Although she seems wary at first, it's soon clear that she has quite a different perspective on the industry. Surprisingly, Jad lets her talk.
'Coming here was the biggest mistake of my life,' she says immediately. 'In my country, I have my home, my family. But it's hard to make money. I worked with my brother in his business, but because of the economy, the business failed.'
Lina lights a cigarette and sighs. 'I've worked many jobs in my life, but I hate the system in Lebanon,' she says. 'I thought I was coming here to work in a disco, but when I came here and found out everything, I was shocked. Girls had told me what it would be like, but they only told me half the truth. I imagined that I would only have to go with people I liked.… I'm just waiting for my contract to finish so I can go home.'
Her eyes fill with tears and she looks away. 'I hate when someone chooses me,' she says quietly. 'I feel like I'm a product in a market and anyone can just point at me and say, 'I want that.'
Jad interrupts her. 'You're not happy you came to Lebanon?'
She looks him in the eye and smiles sadly. 'I'm happy for one reason. You know why.'
After she leaves, Jad leans back in his chair and is silent for a moment.
'I'm in love with her,' he says after a while. 'But I can't marry her, because if I do, I'd have to get out of this business, and I can't do that right now. This business isn't for her, and I respect her for that.'
Not everyone involved with the industry is as forthcoming as Jad. It takes some time for Toros Siranossian, who represents super nightclubs to the Syndicate of Owners of Restaurants, Cafes, Night-Clubs and Pastries in Lebanon, which serves as a lobbying body between investors and owners and the government, to admit that he's involved with the industry at all.
Siranossian is a grandfatherly man with sharp black eyes, who looks to be in his late 60s. Every time he's asked a direct question, his perfect English suddenly fails him. When he reluctantly agrees to discuss the super nightclub industry, he insists it's a system that actually benefits Lebanese society.
'Lebanon is a tourist country, and because of that, we can't invite people to come see churches and mosques,' he says. 'We must have everything. It's better to have super nightclubs so people can go out with foreign girls instead of Lebanese girls. They'd have to pay a fortune to go out with Lebanese girls, and a lot of Lebanese girls would become prostitutes.'
According to Siranossian, the industry has fallen on hard times in recent years.
'Girls cost more to bring over now,' he says. 'After paying money to the Ministry of Tourism and paying off the police, that's a lot of expenses.… Now, unless [super nightclubs] do dirty business, like forcing the girls to sleep with customers, they won't make enough.'
Recent difficulties aside, the super nightclubs still have a loyal clientele among many Lebanese. Tony, a confident, muscular man in his early 40s dressed in jeans and a crew-neck sweater, is a frequent customer of the clubs. Although technically Christian, Tony, whose name has been changed, doesn't consider himself religious. He says that the industry is completely unique to Lebanon.
'These clubs would not be able to operate for one day in any other country,' he says.
'They're in a category by themselves. I mean, the whole thing is such a procedure -- you can't even get a girl on the same night. But it works here, maybe because of the culture, which is open in a lot of ways but still very conservative in others.'
According to Tony, the super nightclub industry has its redeeming qualities.
'There are benefits to the system,' he says. 'The girls have to get tested, and they're usually pretty well protected. But there are downsides too. Those girls basically live in a prison. They're locked in their hotels for most of the time, and they don't leave unless they have a customer. All the girls I meet at clubs are completely depressed. It's not exactly a turn-on.'
Tony said that the government tolerates the industry because they can tax its revenues and because officials consider it better to contain and regulate prostitution than have it spread throughout the country. 'They've turned Maameltein into Lebanon's red-light district,' he says.
The complex nature of the super nightclub industry is typical of Lebanon, a country with more than its fair share of contradictions. As one drives past the neon signs of Maameltein's cheap hotels and seedy clubs, it's almost impossible not to compare it to the glitz and glamour of Beirut night life. Every Saturday night, while sleek Dior-clad women sip cocktails at luxurious rooftop clubs, super nightclub women just 20 minutes away don halter tops and micro-minis and prepare for work.
'It's like Jesus and Judas,' Jad says of the industry, touching his crucifix. 'God put Judas on Earth to kill Jesus. The super nightclubs are just fulfilling their purpose. Lebanon needs us, but it still judges us.'
Source

Cassino Night Club is a restaurant and club with a design inspired by an old James Bond movie casino scene. Every table is considered a VIP table, all in a prime location where you can enjoy great drinks, cuisine and entertainment. Known for its nightly musical performances, Cassino is sure to offer wild and entertaining nights for party-goers. Free Night Club video slots are provided for practice play, although obviously no real cash prizes will be paid out. Entering the Club If the golden 10 symbol stops on 3, 4, or 5 reels across an active payline, gamblers are rewarded with 2x, 5x, or 10x the line stake, with the J, Q and K each being worth a little more and the top card symbol is. Casino Beirut Nightclub! Hra Poker Na Stiahnutie Zadarmo! With g casino brighton poker room the best music, the hottest DJs, and the best looking crowd 11 reviews of The Lava Club 'Had a great time there- it was casino beirut nightclub so much fun.! B018 started out as an underground music night in the 1980s against the backdrop of the Lebanon War. In the late-1990s Khoury built a permanent home for the club in the industrial Karantina. Cassino nightclub is arguably the most famous and sophisticated nightclub in Lebanon. Located in Sodeco, the Cassino's internal furnishing is something our of a James Bond movie with all the tables designed in a VIP mode. Certainly a place to visit!.

Rina talks about the night life in Beirut.

Your browser does not support the audio tag.
Night

Todd: So, Rina, you were saying Lebanon, or Beirut, has really good night clubs. (Mm-hm) Ah, what's a really cool night club in Beirut?

Rina: My favorite night club was rated 5th in Maxim magazine, and it's called B. O. 18, and what it used to be was a Palestinian burial ground and,

Todd: Wait a minute! (Yeah) It, there's no longer dead people there?

Rina: No, no, no. It used to be. (OK) Just during the civil war, cause there was a 17 year war, and what it is, you walk up, you don't see anything, it's just a big open space, but you see these, like, almost like subway stairs going down, and you go down these stairs and the theme inside this place is death, and it's like a big coffin, so you have red velvet walls and all the tables are little coffins with Palestinian soldier pictures on it and single rows and it's just a really good, it's a really neat club. And I went to a lot of theme clubs, too, I went to one that's called The Music Hall and it's like just, like a big theater, it was just amazing.

Todd: So, what's The Music Hall like?

Casino beirut night club london

Rina: Um, well they had that night I went, they had five different groups: One American group, one Spanish, one Lebanese, and they all just, it's like a theater, like scene one, scene two, and each scene would be a different music, genre like, you know.

Todd: That's pretty cool.

Rina: Yeah, it was cool.

Todd: So, at these night clubs, how do people dress? What's the fashion?

Rina: Um, Lebanese girls, and people that were like Lebanese girls, they're very trend conscious. Oh, yeah. Like if it's in a magazine, they're wearing it type thing. They look down on anybody, that doesn't.

Todd: Ah, so.

Rina: Yeah, and it's all like, done up like they went to the salon that day to go out sort of thing.

Todd: Wow! (Yeah) So we're talking, like the skimpy dressed that they have?

Rina: Everything. Oh, yeah.

Todd: Your kidding. What do the guys dress like?

Rina: Ah, the guys are, they dress prettier than some of the girls.

Todd: No kidding.

Rina: Yeah, the guys dress really well, but very, just as I said, very trend conscious. Everybody's very image, image conscious. It's really a lot like Japan in that way.

Todd: Mm, oh cool. Thanks.


burial ground

It used to be a Palestinian burial ground.

A 'burial ground' is a cemetery, or a place where people put their dead. Notice the following:

  1. We visited the burial ground of my ancestors.
  2. When they started to prepare for the new building they found a burial ground on the property.

Casino Beirut Night Club Tour

theme

You go down these stairs and the theme inside this place is death.

A 'theme' is a subject or an idea of a certain place or event. In this case, the idea is death and the decorations are probably images of death. Notice the following:

  1. The theme of the party is love.
  2. The decorations in the house had a very modern theme.

neat

It's a really neat club.

In this case, 'neat' means cool, interesting, fun or entertaining. Notice the following:

  1. My new computer is very neat.
  2. Have you eaten at the new Italian restaurant? It's neat!

trend

Lebanese girls, they're very trend conscious.

A 'trend' is something that is popular right now. We use this to refer to clothes, food, activities, etc. Notice the following:

  1. He always follows the trends.
  2. The new hairstyle trend is really interesting.

look down on

They look down on anybody that doesn't.

If you 'look down on' something, you don't approve of it or think it's a good idea. Notice the following:

  1. They will look down on you for smoking.
  2. She looks down on people if they are not rich.

More Lessons

574 Movie Fan
Todd and Nitiya discuss movies.
573 Canadian Town
Rina talks about her town in Canada.
572 Lebanon
Rina talks about the country her parents came from.

Casino Beirut Night Club Hotel

571 Two Cultures
Rina talks about being from two different cultures.

Looking for more?

Casino Beirut Night Club Tickets

Get More Lessons Here >>